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Transcript of SCM Concepts
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MIT Center for
Transportation & Logistics
CTL.SC1x -Supply Chain & Logistics Fundamentals
Introduction to Logistics & Supply
Chain Management:Key Concepts
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Agenda
•
Push vs. Pull Systems•
Segmentation Strategies
! Products
! Supply Chains
• Handling Uncertainty
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Push vs. Pull Processes
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Pull vs Push Processes
• Push –!
Execution is performed in anticipation of an order
! Demand is forecasted
! Proactive process based on projected need/demand
•
Pull –!
Execution is performed in response to an order
!
Demand is actual and known with certainty
! Reactive process based on actual need/demand
•
Push / Pull Boundary!
Point where push processes are separated from pull processes
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Story of Three Sandwiches
Signature Ham Sandwich
Buy RawMaterials
PrepareComponents
Final Assembly
SellProduct
Ready Made Turkey Wrap
One-of-a-Kind Dagwood
PUSH
PUSH
PUSH
PULL
PULL
PULL
PUSH
PULL
PULL
PUSH
PUSH
PULL
By U.S. Department of Agriculture (20111012-FNCS-LSC-0195) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikim
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3A20111012-FNCS-LSC-0195_-_Flickr_-_USDAgov.jpg By pdphoto.org (pdphoto.org) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ASandwich.jpg "Dagwood" by EncycloPetey - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons –
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dagwood.JPG#mediaviewer/File:Dagwood.JPG 6
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Push vs Pull Processes
• What about pure systems?! Pure push – leads to higher inventory levels and potential spoilage /
imbalance but faster cycle time
! Pure pull – very rare
• Mixed systems are common – Where is the Push-Pull Point?!
Push undifferentiated, raw product or components!
Pull finished product
• Benefits of mixed systems!
Allows for efficient mass customization (Postponement)
! Allows for pooling of products – aggregating demand
• Key Principles!
Maximize external variety with minimal internal variety
! Keep in-process inventory as “Raw as Possible” (RAP)
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Segmentation
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How should I treat these products differently?
By Tage Olsin (Cropped from Image:Baseball.jpg by Tage Olsin) [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ABaseball_(crop).jpg
By Matt Boulton derivative work: MrPanyGoff [CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], viaWikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AIce_hockey_puck_-_2.jpg
Ball, Braden (2012) Simulation as a Method for Determining Inventory Classifications for Allocation, MIT Masters Thesis
Distribution
Center
FulfillmentCenter
FulfillmentCenter
FulfillmentCenter
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
c
Summer
Winter
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Supply Chain Segmentation• How many segments? (Rules of thumb)
! Homogenous- within the segment should be similar
! Heterogeneous- across segments should be very different
! Critical Mass - should be big enough to make it worthwhile
! Pragmatic - dimensions should be useful and communicable
•
How can I segment my customers or suppliers?Lead time Service LevelPurchase History Order Size/VolumeGeography DemographicSales Trends Channel SegmentationStrategic Importance
• How can I segment my products?! Physical characteristics (value, size, density, etc.)
! Demand characteristics (sales volume, volatility, sales duration, etc.)! Supply characteristics (availability, location, reliability, etc.)
Adapted from Prashant Yadav (2005) Course Notes, Zaragoza Logistics Center.
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Distribution of SKUs
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Product Segmentation• Local Grocery Store
! ~20,000 SKUs
! Categories: Dry, Frozen, & Perishables
• Analysis of Dry Goods (~8,000 SKUs)! 1.156 M SKUs sold in 1 year
!
Number of units sold per SKU" Mean 144
"
Median 72
"
Mode 0
" Std Dev 355
• Biggest Sellers?
• Biggest Sales Day?
Top Sellers1. EVAPORATED MILK 12 OZ2. BATHROOM TISSUE3. BOTTLED WATER 1 GALLON4. MAC’N CHEESE5. CANNED WHITE TUNA
How are products distributed in terms of sales volume?Uniform? Normal? Other?
Kerslake, Christopher (2005) A Method for Analyzing the Delivery Frequency From a Distribution Center to a Retail Grocery Store, MIT Masters Thesis"Faced products on a supermarket shelf" by Amnesiac86 - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/
wiki/File:Faced_products_on_a_supermarket_shelf.JPG#mediaviewer/File:Faced_products_on_a_supermarket_shelf.JPG.
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Potential Product Distributions
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
P e r c e n t o f S a l e s V o l u m e
Percent of SKUs
Uniform Normal Power LogNormal
14
144
144 144
144
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Frequency of SKU Sales
y = 1.1245x0.3784
R2 = 0.9717
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Percent of Products
P e
r c e n t o f I t e m s S o l d
This is an example of the Power Law, y=ax k Why is this important?
Is this distribution unique?
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Example: Distribution of Traffic on Lanes
!"
$!"
%!"
&!"
'!"
(!"
)!"
*!"
+!"
,!"
$!!"
!" $!" %!" &!" '!" (!" )!" *!" +!" ,!" $!!"
! " # $ " % & ( ) * ( & + , - ( , . / " 0 1 2 3 4 / " % & 5 6
!"#$"%& () *(&+, 7+%"5 08 93:3& 4(5&+, $(9" &( 8 93:3& 4(5&+, $(9"6
Full Truckload movements between Postal Codes in US5 million shipments on ~400k lanes
3% of volume is handledby 43% of the lanes!
50% of volume is handledby 3% of the lanes!
Very few traffic lanes accountfor the vast majority oftruckload movements.
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Power Law (y=axk )
Fundamental InsightDistribution of many phenomena across apopulation follow a Power Law relationship
• Exceptionally common in physical and social systems!
Severity of hurricanes and earthquakes! Income within a population (Pareto’s Law)
! Visits to websites (Nielsen’s Law) & blogs! Frequency of words in any language (Zipf’s Law)! Frequency of digits within tables (Benford’s Law)
! Frequency of authors citations in literature (Lotka’s Law)!
Animals’ metabolic rates with respect to mass (Kleiber’s Law)! Profitability of customers & products! Distribution of volume on traffic lanes! Questions from students in a class
The important few versus the trivial many
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
ABC Analysis
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Segmentation: ABC Analysis
• Class A Items - the important few !
Very few high impact items are included!
Require the most managerial attention and review! Expect many exceptions to be made
• Class B Items – the middleshare !
Many moderate impact items (sometimes most)!
Automated control w/ management by exception!
Rules can be used for A (but usually too many exceptions)
• Class C Items - the trivial many !
Many if not most of the items that make up minor impact!
Control systems should be as simple as possible!
Reduce wasted management time and attention!
Group into common regions, suppliers, end users
Remember – these are arbitrary classifications
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Segmentation: ABC Analysis
Part ID Price
Annual
Demand
Annual $
Value5497J 2.25$ 260 585.00$
3K62 2.85$ 43 122.55$
88450 1.50$ 21 31.50$
P001 0.77$ 388 298.76$
2M993 4.45$ 612 2,723.40$
3HHT8 6.10$ 220 1,342.00$
56M4 3.10$ 110 341.00$89KE 1.32$ 786 1,037.52$
45O3 12.80$ 14 179.20$
55K2 24.99$ 334 8,346.66$
978SD3 7.75$ 24 186.00$
78HJQ2 0.68$ 77 52.36$
23LK 0.25$ 56 14.00$
990RT 3.89$ 89 346.21$58JH4 7.70$ 675 5,197.50$
2340P 6.22$ 66 410.52$
3784 0.85$ 148 125.80$
38JQ2 0.77$ 690 531.30$
56TT7 1.23$ 52 63.96$
7UJS2 4.05$ 12 48.60$
4,677 21,983.84$
1. Identify the SKUs that managementshould spend time on
2.
Prioritize SKUs by their value to firm3. Create logical groupings4. Adjust as needed
Example:• Sample of 20 SKUs
•
Total of 4,677 units• Total ~$22k
ci Di ciDi
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Economic value
D e m a n d v a r i a b i l i t y
H
L
C B A
Volatile: Sophisticated techniques; frequent reviews
Unimportant: Unsophisticated techniques; infrequent reviews
Stable: Less sophisticated techniques; less frequent reviews
Segmentation: Other Methods
Adapted from Prashant Yadav (2005) Course Notes, Zaragoza Logistics Center.
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Segmenting Supply Chains
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Segmentation: Innovative vs. Functional
Functional Innovative
Demand Predictable Unpredictable
Life Cycle Long > 2 yrs Short
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Fast / HighCost
IntermediateDesign
Slow/Low Cost
Manufacturing
Location
On shore
(e.g., US/Europe)
Near shore
(e.g., Mexico/ Romania)
Off shore
(e.g., China, Vietnam)
InternationalShipping
Air Freight Rail/Truck Ocean
Final AssemblyLocation
On Shore Near Shore Off Shore
Order FulfillmentLocation
On Shore(Factory/DC)
Near Shore(Factory/DC)
Off Shore(Factory/DC)
Inventory StockingModel
Build to Stock Configure to Order Build to Order
Decision variables for SC Design :
(One option is chosen from each column)
Supply Chain Portfolio
Source: Olavsun, Lee, & DeNyse (2010) “A Portfolio Approach to Supply Chain Design,” Supply Chain Management Review. Adapted from Sheffi (2010) ESD.260 Course Notes
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Fast / HighCost
IntermediateDesign
Slow/Low Cost
Manufacturing
Location
On shore (e.g.,
US/Europe)
InternationalShipping
Rail/Truck
Final AssemblyLocation
On Shore
Order FulfillmentLocation
On Shore (Factory/DC)
Inventory StockingModel
Build to Stock
Original Inkjet SC:
Supply Chain Portfolio
Source: Olavsun, Lee, & DeNyse (2010) “A Portfolio Approach to Supply Chain Design,” Supply Chain Management Review. Adapted from Sheffi (2010) ESD.260 Course Notes “Hp500-1" by Oguenther - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hp500-1.png#mediaviewer/Fil
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Fast / HighCost
IntermediateDesign
Slow/Low Cost
Manufacturing
Location
Off shore (e.g.,
China, Vietnam)International
ShippingOcean
Final AssemblyLocation
On Shore
Order FulfillmentLocation
On Shore (Factory/DC)
Inventory StockingModel
Configure to Order
Postponement Inkjet SC:
Supply Chain Portfolio
Source: Olavsun, Lee, & DeNyse (2010) “A Portfolio Approach to Supply Chain Design,” Supply Chain Management Review. Adapted from Sheffi (2010) ESD.260 Course Notes"Hp-deskjet-895cxi". Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hp-deskjet-895cxi.jpg#mediaviewer/File:Hp-des
"MFHP1600" by LupisSM - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MFHP1600.JPG#mFile:MFHP1600.JPG28
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Fast / HighCost
IntermediateDesign
Slow/Low Cost
Manufacturing
Location
Off shore (e.g.,
China, Vietnam)International
ShippingOcean
Final AssemblyLocation
Off Shore
Order FulfillmentLocation
On Shore (Factory/DC)
Inventory StockingModel
Build to Stock
Cost Competition Inkjet:
Supply Chain Portfolio
Source: Olavsun, Lee, & DeNyse (2010) “A Portfolio Approach to Supply Chain Design,” Supply Chain Management Review. Adapted from Sheffi (2010) ESD.260 Course Notes"MFHP1600" by LupisSM - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MFHP1600.JPG#mediaviewer/File:MFHP160
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Variability & Uncertainty
• Occurs in all aspects of supply chains
•
Managing to the “mean” or “average” is rarely sufficient
• Handled by assuming a probability distribution!
Normal Distribution ~N(µ, ")
"
Continuous (-#
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
u0
f u(u0) f u u
0( ) =e
! x0
2
2
2!
0
Normal Distribution
• Normal ~N(µ, ")•
Spreadsheets• NORMINV(probability,µ,") =µ+k "x• NORMDIST(x,µ,",1) =P[x
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Poisson Distribution• Poisson ~P(%)
! Probability of x events occurring w/in a time period
! Mean = Variance = %
• In Spreadsheets:! p(x0) = POISSON(x0,%,0)
! F(x0) = POISSON(x0,%,1)
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
P r o
b a b i l i t y
Random Variable
2.2 4 8
p[ x0]= Prob x = x
0
!"
#$=
e%!
! x0
x0!
for x0 = 0,1,2,...
F [ x0]= Prob x & x
0
!" #$=e%!
! x
x! x=0
x0
'
Poisson Tables (partial)• Columns: % • Rows: F(x0)
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Key Points from Lesson
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CTL.SC1x - Supply Chain and Logistics Fundamentals Lesson: Key concepts
Key Points from Lesson• Push vs. Pull Systems
! Push – proactive based on forecast demand
! Pull – reactive based on actual demand
• Benefits of Mixed Systems!
Maximize external variety with minimal internal variety
! Keep in-process inventory as “Raw as Possible” (RAP)
! Postponement & Aggregated Demand
• Segmentation Strategies!
Segment for a purpose (functional vs. innovative)
!
Product segmentation (ABC) – good starting point• Handling Uncertainty
!
Normal Distribution
! Poisson Distribution
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MIT Center for
Transportation & Logistics
CTL.SC1x -Supply Chain & Logistics Fundamentals
Questions, Comments, Suggestions?
Use the Discussion!
caplice@mit edu
"Jack Russell tilting her head" by Writ Keeper - Own work. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike3.0 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jack_Russell_tilting_her_head.jpg